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Moneymakers: The Wicked Lives and Surprising Adventures of Three Notorious Counterfeiters

door Ben Tarnoff

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Recounts how three of America's most successful counterfeiters, Owen Sullivan (worked 1720-1756), David Lewis (worked 1788-1820), and Samuel Upham (worked 1819-1885), each cunningly manipulated the political and economic realities of his day.
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Short biographies/case studies of three American counterfeiters: Owen Sullivan during the colonial period, David Lewis in the 1810s, and Samuel Upham, who printed "facsimile" Confederate bills during the Civil War. Well researched and engagingly written. ( )
  JBD1 | Aug 14, 2018 |
Not only about phony money but a good history of the currency of the UnitedStates. ( )
  carterchristian1 | Mar 4, 2013 |
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In the midst of the current economic chaos, our faith in that most modest of financial instruments — the dollar1 bill — has remained unchanged. Not the mass dollar, that abstract plurality, ebbing and ebbing again, but the Federal Reserve notes in your pocket. Your dollars may lose value, but at least they are real.

Such confidence is a recent luxury, Ben Tarnoff observes in “Moneymakers: The Wicked Lives and Surprising Adventures of Three Notorious Counterfeiters.” “By the time the federal government began regulating the money supply,” Tarnoff writes, “there were more than 10,000 different kinds of notes circulating in the United States.” With so much paper being issued — from state-chartered institutions like banks, railroads and insurance companies — even the savviest merchants could not keep up with the proliferation of legal currencies, let alone identify counterfeits. In this wealth of confusion, lasting from the colonial period until after the Civil War, counterfeiters thrived.

In a country where the prevailing national fantasy was — and remains — that you make your own luck, the counterfeiter exerted powerful charm. Self-made men in a class-bound nation, counterfeiters were a roguish personification of the American dream. Tarnoff, a first-time author, expertly sketches biographical vignettes; beguiling and clever, counterfeiters not only mastered the art of forgery and the con, but often ingratiated themselves with their marks. Tarnoff doesn’t linger over the mechanics of counterfeiting. The process lacks sex appeal. Unlike, say, art forgers, counterfeiters were usually disgruntled printers or metalworkers. Rather, he concentrates on career trajectories. Counterfeiters typically passed bills for several years before being caught, were sometimes celebrated, and then hanged or mutilated with branding irons. . . .

toegevoegd door PLReader | bewerkNY Times, Michael Washburn (Jan 28, 2011)
 
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Recounts how three of America's most successful counterfeiters, Owen Sullivan (worked 1720-1756), David Lewis (worked 1788-1820), and Samuel Upham (worked 1819-1885), each cunningly manipulated the political and economic realities of his day.

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